During the Apollo missions, I was reading a lot of sf, mainly focused on James Blish but also reading Heinlein, Anderson etc. Consequently, I hoped for
interstellar exploration in the early twenty-first century. Heinlein's Future History had introduced the idea of an interregnum of space travel. That has happened, more or less, at least beyond Earth orbit. But by now I would have expected reusable spaceships, not another circum-Lunar mission beginning with a big rocket blastoff and ending with a parachute splashdown.
We are living in the real future, not in any of the fictional ones. Some of those fictional futures involved a World War III aftermath. Poul Anderson covered every option, including WWIII aftermaths followed by space travel. Late at night, I always ask: which further future are we moving into? Wells' Time Traveller sped through tomorrow into futurity. We will live into it, starting tomorrow morning.
Good night.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI agree, compared to the far more advanced spaceships being built by SpaceX, the technology used for the Artemis II mission was disappointingly antiquated.
Jerry Pournelle's Co-Dominium did have a FTL drive being invented early. A pity that did not happen in real life!
Ad astra! Sean